PenPoint OS
The PenPoint OS was a product of GO Corporation and was one of the earliest operating systems written specifically for graphical tablets and personal digital assistants. It ran on AT&T's EO Personal Communicator as well as a number of Intel x86 powered tablet PCs including IBM's ThinkPad 700T series, NCR's 3125, 3130 and some of GRiD Systems' pen-based portables.
Developers of the PenPoint OS included Robert Carr, who was involved with the Alto computer at Xerox PARC.
Awards and innovation
Byte magazine awarded PenPoint best Operating System in the 1992 Byte Awards. PenPoint won in the Standards and Operating Systems category in PC Magazine's 1991 Technical Excellence awards.[1]
The PenPoint operating system had novel early implementations of several computing advances, including:
- a large set of gestures such as circle to edit, X to delete, and caret to insert
- using the same gestures at all levels of the operating system and applications
- press and hold for moving any selection, which showed the selection as a floating icon to be dropped into a destination
- a rich notebook user interface metaphor: Documents existed as pages in a notebook with tabs (this was not new in PenPoint, but PenPoint was the first to make it a primary OS interface; Microsoft later did it in Windows for Pen Computing)
- a document architecture where each document was a directory nested in another document's directory (in some sense, this was an extension of the document architecture on Multics)
- dynamic toolkit layout: this allowed applications to rescale for landscape and portrait orientation
- a system-wide pluggable address book
In April 2008, as part of a larger federal court case, the gesture features of the Windows/Tablet PC operating system and hardware were found to infringe on a patent by GO Corp. concerning user interfaces for the PenPoint OS.[2]
Third-party applications
The novel user interface of PenPoint and the mobile form factor of pen computers inspired many startup software companies, including:
- Inkwriter by Aha! Software which was purchased by Microsoft and became the basis for Microsoft's Windows Journal
- FutureWave Software (SmartSketch, a vector-drawing program that evolved into Adobe Flash)
- Glyphic Technology (Glyphic Script prototype-based programming language, with Codeworks direct interactive programming environment[3])
- PenMagic (Numero spreadsheet and LetterExpress document fill-in templates)
- Pensoft (Perspective personal data manager, winner of a BYTE award in 1992). Pensoft was acquired by Eo.
- Slate (several pen applications). Slate's founders included industry luminaries Dan Bricklin and Bob Frankston.
- Gaia Software (Personal Media personal productivity applications)
- Conic Systems (LocatorGIS survey/mapping application that briefly went into production at Ordnance Survey in the UK)
- Ink Development released InkWare NoteTaker and InkWare Photo. Pierre Omidyar and Greg Stein were two of the founders. Ink Development renamed themselves eShop when they pivoted to electronic commerce software and was later acquired by Microsoft.
References
Further reading
- Carr, Robert; Dan Shafer (1991). The power of PenPoint. Reading, Mass.: Addison Wesley Pub. Co.. ISBN 0-201-57763-1.
- Kaplan, Jerry (1994). Startup : a Silicon Valley adventure. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-025731-4.
- Jennifer Edstrom, Marlin Eller, Barbarians Led by Bill Gates, ISBN 0-80-505755-2, Holt, 1999.
- GO Corporation (1992). PenPoint architectural reference, Volume 1. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0201608596.
- GO Corporation (1992). PenPoint architectural reference, Volume 2. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. ISBN 020160860X.
- GO Corporation (1992). PenPoint user interface design reference. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0201608588.
- GO Corporation (1992). PenPoint application writing guide. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. ISBN 020160857X.
- Novobilski, Andy (1992). PenPoint programming. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0201608332.
External links